Thursday, April 7, 2011

CFV: illumos content authors

I'm looking for people interested in contributing content to the illumos website. Right now we have a test website but it needs help with producing content. First and foremost we need English content, but the new framework will support other localizations as well.

If you're interested in contributing here, drop me an email. I'll be setting up a mailing list for this soon.

Wednesday, March 30, 2011

Thank you Areca! 6Gbps 1880 support in illumos

A big thank you goes out to Areca.

Areca have provided the source code for their Solaris driver, including support for the newer 6G RAID adapters. As a result, I've integrated a (somewhat cleaned up) copy this code as an update to arcmsr(7d) in illumos, under generous open source licensing:

changeset:   13305:fb26af81b9b2
tag: tip
user: Garrett D'Amore
date: Fri Mar 25 22:14:56 2011 -0700
description:
834 need support for Areca 1880 6Gbps
Reviewed by: Dan McDonald <danmcd@nexenta.com>
Reviewed by: Albert Lee <trisk@nexenta.com>
Reviewed by: Richard Lowe <richlowe@richlowe.net>


This will make another HBA option available to folks. (Note these cards do support a JBOD mode, so you don't have to use hardware RAID -- indeed I would recommend that you don't when you have ZFS on the disks.

Monday, March 28, 2011

Another outlet..

So, at the recommendations of others, I'm on twitter now.. Don't know how often I'll keep it updated, but I'll try.

Wednesday, March 23, 2011

illumos has Serbian Family Language Support



I just integrated:

changeset: 13312:537259ad27f6
tag: tip
user: Garrett D'Amore
date: Wed Mar 23 08:35:14 2011 -0700
description:
324 need serbian locale support
Reviewed by: Rich Lowe
Approved by: Garrett D'Amore

This is a bit unusual relative to most of the locales, because Serbo-Croatian is a language fraught with some unique political considerations:

There is a common root language, that everyone speaks and understands. But speakers of it rarely agree on what to call it. In Serbia its Serbian. In Bosnia its Bosnian. And so on for Croatian and Montenegrin.

In illumos, we have followed the Unicode CLDR example, and we now have these locales:

hr_HR.UTF-8 - Croatian in Croatia
sr_BA.UTF-8 - Serbian in Bosnia and Herzegovina
sr_ME.UTF-8 - Serbian in Montenegro
sr_RS.UTF-8 - Serbian in Serbia

I want to apologize to anyone offended by this decision, but rather than make a contentious decision on our own, I decided it was best to simply follow the decisions of an international standards body. I believe that there is no fundamental difference in the languages, although some national variances appear to be present in the data files. If someone has more accurate names for these, or believes that some aliased locales will assist with compatibility with other operating systems, then I would be happy to hear suggestions. Ideally from someone familiar with accepted practice in these locations.

There is another wrinkle in all this too. This language -- thanks largely to occupation by Soviet forces as part of the SFR Yugoslavia, is commonly represented using two different alphabets -- Cyrillic and Latin. Generally most locations use Latin, but within Serbia, Cyrillic is mandated by law. So sr_RS uses Cyrillic, while the others use Latin.

Here are the two alphabets:

А Б В Г Д Ђ Е Ж З И Ј К Л Љ М Н Њ О П Р С Т Ћ У Ф Х Ц Ч Џ Ш
A B C Č Ć D Dž Đ E F G H I J K L Lj M N Nj O P R S Š T U V Z Ž

Anyway, if someone sees room for corrections or improvements here, especially if they are familiar with the language(s) and/or region(s), I would appreciate hearing back from you.


Saturday, March 19, 2011

Planet OpenSolaris *isn't*

It would appear that the old Planet OpenSolaris is no longer a community site.

At least the only blog posts that seem to be there anymore are those that are hosted on blogs.sun.com.

Certainly my posts, which used to show up there until quite recently, no longer do so.

Its possible that this is just a technical snafu, but the recent burst of posts there from Oracle employees suggest a shuffling of things internally in how Oracle handles blogs, and I suspect that eradication of community posts is just one more step along the way.

Of course, if I'm wrong, this post will show up there, and I'll have egg all over my face. :-)